4.5 Article

A Pneumatic Low-Pass Filter for High-Fidelity Cuff-Based Pulse Waveform Acquisition

Journal

ANNALS OF BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10439-023-03312-z

Keywords

Blood pressure measurement; Brachial cuff; Cardiovascular diagnostics; Pulse waveform analysis; RC filter

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This study demonstrates the improved signal quality of cuff-based pulse waveform acquisition (CBPWA) devices by implementing passive pneumatic low-pass filters (pLPF). The study shows that the use of pLPF in CBPWA improves the reliability and signal resolution of the devices.
Cuff-based pulse waveform acquisition (CBPWA) devices are reliable solutions for non-invasive cardiovascular diagnostics. However, poor signal resolution has limited clinical applications. This study aims to demonstrate the improved signal quality of CBPWA devices by implementing passive pneumatic low-pass filters (pLPF). Conventionally, pressure sensor output resolution is a percentage of the operating range. Therefore, measurement of small pressure changes in a large range must sacrifice signal resolution to accommodate for the large mean pressures. We design a pLPF to obtain the running mean pressure and combine it with a high-resolution differential pressure sensor for isolating the signal's pulsatile component. Thirty-one volunteers participated in a device proof-of-concept study at Caltech. Volunteers were measured at rest in the supine position on the left arm. The filtering behavior is mathematically modeled and experimentally verified, showing good agreement between measured and predicted cutoff frequencies. In the human study, the device successfully captured high-fidelity pulse waveform measurements for all volunteers: a blood pressure (BP) reading was followed by inflate-and-hold acquisition in diastolic BP (DBP), mean arterial pressure (MAP), and supra systolic BP (sSBP). The study demonstrated the reliability and high signal resolution of pLPF for CBPWA. Considering the widespread use of the brachial cuff, a system for high-resolution CBPWA motivates the clinical implementation of non-invasive pulse waveform analysis (PWA).

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